While iTunes (and especially the iTunes Music Store) helped change the way we enjoy our favorite music, there will be few tearjerking obituaries for the software. (iTunes itself will also live on for Windows users, Ars Technica reports.) While Apple has been trying to push users toward its subscription-based Apple Music streaming service, the company’s iTunes Music Store - where songs can be individually purchased for download - will live on. With the upcoming version of MacOS, called Catalina, iTunes will be replaced with three separate apps for music, podcasts and shows or movies. Apple is retiring the Mac version of its nearly 20-year-old music listening and library app, the company announced Monday at WWDC, its annual conference for software developers.